Authors: Amanda Carpenter
I take it?' the deep voice sounded right behind her, and she whirled.
Chuckling at the expression on her face, Greg looked past her at the
array of sandwiches and the steaming coffee and murmured
appreciatively, 'A feast for a starving man!'
'Help yourself,' she invited, pulling out a chair for him and laughing
when he sat down. He looked up enquiringly, one dark brow up.
'Am I the cause of that laughter?'
'In a way. You make this kitchen seem so small, and that chair
positively groaned when you sat in it,' she told him with twinkling
eyes. 'I guess I hadn't realised how big you really are.'
In response to her good humour, he suddenly smiled. Sara couldn't
seem to take her eyes off his strong features. While he ate, she sipped
coffee, and they talked about light things, but she got the strangest
feeling as they relaxed together. It was as if they were, really saying
something else, something deeper to each other. Sara looked up from
her coffee quickly once and found his eyes on her in the most intent
and gentle way.
Good heavens, she thought, as she suddenly felt as if she were
drowning in that gaze, what's happening to me? I had no idea he
could be so—her thoughts stopped, and she searched for something
to say.
'I—I saw you outside last night,' she commented at random, and the
gentle look in his eyes was slowly replaced with a look of
puzzlement.
'I'm not sure I know what you mean.'
It was her turn to feel a slight puzzlement and she explained, 'Out in
the front yard, after I went inside, were you—walking around about
half an hour later?'
He frowned. 'I went right home. Are you sure you saw something?'
She sat very still and thought over the last night, and gradually a cold
chill crept over her. There had been a dark figure out front, she felt
sure, and the realisation that it hadn't been Greg after all put an
entirely different light on the situation. She had completely forgotten
that she had been afraid enough when she had thought that it was
him. Standing abruptly, she went into the living room to stare out of
the front picture window. The direction of her gaze showed her that
there was nothing where a tall figure had been before, no brush or
bush or tree that could be misconstrued as something else. There had
been someone there last night—she was sure of it. A hand touched
her shoulder and she jumped violently. Without looking around, she
became aware that Greg was very close. She could feel his body heat
at her back, and on impulse she leaned back against his chest. He
immediately put his arms around her, and it felt so good and warm
and right that she sighed, closing her eyes. A slight pressure at the
side of her head told her that he was leaning his cheek against her
hair. She had never felt so small and vulnerable and yet so safe,
before in her life. Greg was very careful in how he held her; she
could feel the restrained power in his arms. They stood this way for a
long time.
'There was someone out there last night, Greg—I swear it.'
His arms tightened and his head went up as he too looked out the
window. 'Where?'
She pointed out the spot to him, for some reason unable to feel the
alarm that had been so apparent just minutes before. Greg's presence
was too immediate and overwhelming to her. He looked out the
window for a minute, and when she tilted her head back on his
shoulder to see his expression, he quickly smiled reassuringly and
dropped a kiss on her hose. 'I need to get going, I'm afraid—got a lot
of things to do, and Beowulf is penned up. He needs a meal and a
run. Would you like me to stop by later this evening, and have a look
around outside, just in case?'
Sara looked up gratefully at him. 'I'd appreciate it if you did. I'd feel
much better about things, really.'
'I'll knock at your front door, then, and let you know that it's me
prowling about outside, so that you don't faint from shock, all right?'
She nodded, and a strange look came over his face, a brooding look
that was almost hostile. It was as if a shutter had come down over his
features, masking his thoughts from the outer world. She had begun
to know him better, though, and to understand him in an instinctive
way. She knew enough to look beyond that careful mask, and she
saw his dark eyes watching her with great attention. Intuitively
guessing his feelings, she ignored that brooding look and went up to
him to put a light hand on his arm with a smile.
'I really am fine, you know,' she murmured. 'Don't worry about me.'
His body relaxed, though his face didn't change. He said abruptly. It's
just that when you didn't answer the door today, I started to wonder .
. . call me if you need anything.'
'I will.'
She walked him to the front door, thanking him again for the
firewood. He turned back to answer her, his eyes smiling again in
that subtle way, then his eyes lit upon the upright piano. 'Oh, was that
left here with the furniture?' he asked idly, flicking a careless hand to
it. Sara turned to see what he had meant and stiffened. It was an
involuntary reaction, and she couldn't help herself even though she
knew that he had sensed her strange behaviour and was looking at her
oddly.
'No,' she replied shortly, moving away. 'It's mine. I had it brought in
when I moved.' To tell the truth, she owned three pianos, all in vastly
better shape and quality than this one, but she had bought it for
temporary use, not wanting to ship hers halfway across America.
Greg was watching her with an interested look. 'So you play. Are you
good?' He looked thoughtful and she felt suddenly desperate to wipe
that look off his face. She didn't want him to find out who she was
just yet. It would cause a rift, either in his thinking or in hers. He
would back away from her like a cat landing on hot bricks, she
guessed, because of her exposure to the public, or she would run
away from him in a panic, afraid that she would never know his
motives for continuing their relationship were he to discover her real
identity.
'So-so,' she muttered, then she said quickly. 'Maybe some day I'll
practice up and play you something. I'm rusty at the moment.' It's
true, she argued silently with herself. I am out of practice. This silent
argument didn't assuage her sense of guilt, for she knew she had let
him think that she was a bashful amateur. Her own concept of being
out of practice was totally out of the league that she had implied to
him she was in. She could sit at that piano and play with a passionate
grace at any given time. The tiny mistakes that she would be apt to
make would not be noticed by a normal listener.
Greg was smiling down at her easily. Was it just her imagination or
did something flit across his face? 'Maybe some time you could. I'd
like that—I'm quite a music lover.'
'Oh no!' she groaned involuntarily, and he looked at her with both
brows up. She added hastily, 'I bet that means you're an intelligent
and informed critic and you only listen to the masters in the field.
Now you'll never get me to play!' A good excuse, she congratulated
herself. Without conceit, she knew that she had a distinctive style,
and she didn't want to try to put him off with a clumsy attempt to
play either badly or in another style.
'But I would take into account your experience and not judge you
unfairly,' he promised, with a curious smile.
'I'll bet,' she retorted, and laughed. 'Enough! I have work to do and
you have a starving dog, so I don't want to hear any more. See you.'
She leaned weakly against the door after he left. 'Fool!' she berated
herself angrily, and the sound of her own voice was so loud in the
suddenly silent house that she jumped. Why, oh, why hadn't she lied
when he asked her who owned the piano? Was it that she secretly
hoped he would guess the truth about her and demonstrate how little
it mattered to him? Did she hope that if she gave him some subtle
clue as to who she was, he would sooner or later recognise her? Was
it a cowardly way of letting him know the truth and yet getting out of
having to tell him personally? Whatever the reason, it was too late to
change what had happened. She would have to wait and see. Time
would tell whether he recognised her or not.
She was so agitated that she started to pace the living room back and
forth. It took her exactly seven good sized paces to cover the open
area, then she turned to pace the seven steps back. She noted this
with one detached corner of her mind in the crazy, irrelevant way she
had whenever she was really upset. It was solemnly filed away for
future reference. The other part of her mind told herself emphatically
just how stupid she was to be paying so much attention to such a
trivial detail while she had other more important things to think
about. But she couldn't help counting the steps once she had made the
observation. It was like a tape recording playing over and over again:
Seven
up,
seven
back,
five to the
front
door and then seven
up,
seven
back ...
She forced herself to stop and sit down in an effort to think
calmly. Greg Pierson, a man with shadowed eyes, shadowed past,
shadowed motives. What did she really know about him? Materially,
nothing.
A tiny voice whispered, his eyes are warm. She shook her head so
violently that her hair whipped around and caught on her eyelashes.
Raising a hand to push it away impatiently, she stared out of the
picture window at the grey day. Would it rain?
He's strong, that little voice whispered to her. Sara gave a short
mirthless laugh. If she didn't stop this soon they would be taking her
away in a straitjacket! Pretty soon she would be talking to people
who weren't really there, and she promptly said aloud, 'So what?' Her
serious thoughts gave way to a little bit of giggling, and she shook
herself mentally, going into the kitchen to wash up the few dishes
that had been dirtied. She took an excessive amount of time with the
two coffee mugs. She had bought them in Mexico a few years ago,
and they were hand-crafted, very pretty.
He is gentle with you, and concerned, that small voice spoke again.
The still quiet knowledge could not be denied, and she sank slowly
into a chair, the dish cloth in her hands, twisted and unnoticed.
She let herself think of him freely then, without trying to escape from
the direction her thoughts were leading her to. It was, she mused, too
late for her. It had been too late when she had looked into Greg's eyes
and had seen him smile that first heart-stopping time. What kind of
fool was she? She had become infatuated with a total stranger
without a second's resistance.
She was twenty-eight. She was lonely. So what? Many people are.
She had been lonely for most of her life. What was so different now?
She was eager for some kind of meaningful relationship for a change,
instead of the sterile empty acquaintances she'd known for so many
years. She wanted the pain and the pleasure of giving and taking,
learning and loving. That she would fall for the first decent specimen
that stumbled her way without knowing who she really was! What
would he think of her if he knew? That had her smiling grimly. She
could imagine what he might say. A more amusing thought struck her
then: what would Barry think?
He would, she thought crudely, have a hissy fit, and the thought
made her laugh aloud. 'God, Sara!' he would expostulate. 'Don't you
know enough not to get emotionally involved with a vacation fling?
Baby, you've gone right around the bend!'
Someone knocked on her front door and she moved swiftly to
answer. Greg, she thought, but when she swung the door open and
smiled widely at the man standing on her porch, her grin of delight
quickly turned to a blank stare of astonishment and dismay.
'Hello, love,' said Barry, shuffling his feet nervously and smiling
tentatively at her expression. 'Can I—er— come in?'
'Oh, good grief!' she groaned, letting the door knob slip from her
nerveless fingers. The door, left to swing by itself, gently swished